Boy’s Stomach Ache Led To A Scan — Then The Doctor Asked For Dad-heuh

The first time Mason told me his stomach hurt, there was still toast cooling on the plate and the kettle clicking softly on the counter.

His football boots were by the back door, leaving little half-moons of dried mud across the mat.

It was an ordinary morning, the sort that asks nothing of you except packed lunches, missing socks, and getting out before the day slips sideways.

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He pressed one hand under his ribs and looked almost embarrassed by it.

“My stomach feels weird,” he said.

I turned from the sink with the tea towel still in my hand.

“Did you eat too quickly again?”

He shrugged, because he was ten, and ten-year-old boys treat discomfort like a temporary delay in their plans.

“Maybe.”

That was how it began.

Not with screaming.

Not with a collapse.

Not with any sign that our lives were about to narrow down to examination rooms, test results, and the awful silence of adults looking at screens.

Just a simple stomach ache.

Mason had never been a quiet child.

He had been noise and movement from the moment he woke up, asking whether Saturn would float in a bath, whether volcanoes got tired, whether dinosaurs had dreams before they disappeared.

He could make a rocket out of a cardboard box before school and still have enough energy to kick a football across the back garden until the sky went blue-grey and I had to call him in twice.

His laughter used to reach the hall before his feet did.

Then, slowly, the house became quiet in a way I did not like.

At first I told myself it was a bug.

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